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Vermont has ten cities with a combined area of 80.2 sq mi (208 km 2), or 0.8% of the state's total area. [citation needed] According to the 2020 census, 119,299 people, or 18.54% of the state's population, resided in Vermont's cities (excluding Essex Junction, which incorporated in 2022).
On July 21, 2023, the OMB delineated two combined statistical areas, one metropolitan statistical area, and five micropolitan statistical areas in Vermont. [1] As of 2023, the largest of these is the Burlington-South Burlington-Barre, VT CSA , comprising the area around Vermont's largest city, Burlington .
For many years prior to the 1860s Vermont had just one city, which was the city of Vergennes, incorporated in 1788. [3] As in most of New England, population is not a determination in what makes a city or a town in Vermont. Rather, cities are formed when a town's residents choose to switch from a town meeting form to a city form.
The main article for this category is List of municipalities in Vermont#Cities; Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cities in Vermont; See also Vermont and categories Vermont counties, Incorporated villages in Vermont, Census-designated places in Vermont, Unincorporated communities in Vermont
There are fourteen counties in the U.S. state of Vermont. These counties together contain 255 political units, or places, including 237 towns, 10 cities, 5 unincorporated areas, and 4 gores. Each county has a county seat, often referred to as a "shire town." In 1779, Vermont had two counties.
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. Download coordinates as: ... Census-designated places in Vermont, Vermont counties Subcategories. This category has the ...
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Vermont has the twenty-fifth-highest per capita income in the United States of America, at $20,625 (2000). Its personal per capita income is $30,740 (2003). Vermont counties ranked by per capita income